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Introducing team Harrell: New administration includes niece Monisha Harrell, fellow City Hall veteran Tim Burgess

When he is sworn into office in January, Bruce Harrell will bring a team of political allies with him including one person with the ultimate tie of loyalty — family.

The incoming mayor announced many of the key members of his administration this week including former Harrell counterpart on the city council Tim Burgess as director of strategic initiatives, and Harrell’s niece Monisha Harrell who will server as senior deputy mayor.

“Our announcement today makes clear that my administration will be centered on competency and urgency,” Harrell said in the announcement. “My administration will combine ambitious vision and bold, progress-driving ideas with the experienced leadership needed to take action and hit the ground running. I’m proud of the team we’re building, united around the common purpose of making Seattle a bright, prosperous, and thriving city for all. Our team will set a new tone and deliver positive change through new energy and proven decisiveness rooted in community relationships and values.”

Monisha Harrell, who played a major role in his successful run for the office serving campaign manager as the Central District-born political veteran handily defeated City Councilmember Lorena González, has served as board chair for Equal Rights Washington.

Burgess, meanwhile, will fill a new role at city hall, “working on and overseeing projects designated by Mayor-elect Harrell as key priorities.”

The Harrell administration will also begin with a newly created position in the mayor’s office as current deputy mayor Tiffany Washington will stay on to serve as deputy mayor of housing and homelessness.

Harrell’s first moves as he prepares to take office have shown the political veteran unafraid to turn to his closest allies while also expanding opportunities widely to assist and influence the administration. In November following his election victory, Harrell announced a massive transition team with “nearly 150 Seattle leaders” collaborating — and vying — to shape his office.

The new mayor will begin his term with a $7.1 million city budget shaped by less dire but still challenged economic forecasts and major battles over increased spending on the city’s three major crises: affordable housing, homelessness and addiction, and COVID-19 recovery.

Meanwhile, council president González is wrapping up her six years in City Hall.

Harrell’s full announcement and roster of announced administration positions is below.

Mayor-Elect Bruce Harrell Announces First Wave of Administration Leaders

Harrell assembles first building blocks of a diverse and outcome-driven team of forward-thinking leaders

Seattle –Today, Seattle Mayor-elect Bruce Harrell announced the first significant hires of his administration – the beginning of a diverse and experienced team of leaders that will support his efforts to unify, inspire, and address the urgent challenges facing Seattle. Members of the team include civic leaders from inside and outside local government, bringing critical lived and professional experience to the issues the mayor-elect will address.

“Our announcement today makes clear that my administration will be centered on competency and urgency,” said Mayor-elect Harrell. “My administration will combine ambitious vision and bold, progress-driving ideas with the experienced leadership needed to take action and hit the ground running. I’m proud of the team we’re building, united around the common purpose of making Seattle a bright, prosperous, and thriving city for all. Our team will set a new tone and deliver positive change through new energy and proven decisiveness rooted in community relationships and values.”

Mayor-elect Harrell’s administration will operate with three deputy mayors, including Senior Deputy Mayor Monisha Harrell; a newly created position of deputy mayor of housing and homelessness led by Tiffany Washington; and a deputy mayor of external relations. Mayor-elect Harrell has chosen to keep the deputy mayor of external relations position open in January given his commitment to listen closely to constituents before making his hiring decision.

“I want that deputy mayor position to focus on what the residents and small businesses demanded from the City when they elected me,” said Mayor-elect Harrell. “The deputy mayor of external relations will help build the external partnerships needed to deliver results in measurable terms.”

As Seattle addresses immediate challenges of public safety, reimagining current police services to include non-armed responders, and negotiating a new police contract that inspires stability, service, and excellence, Monisha Harrell brings over a decade of leadership as one of the state’s foremost leaders addressing police reform, including service as a deputy monitor for Seattle’s longstanding federal consent decree.

Tiffany Washington, a housing and human services leader currently serving as a Seattle deputy mayor, will ensure needed continuity as Mayor-elect Harrell takes office and implements an ambitious agenda for addressing the crisis of homelessness and housing insecurity. This new position will be laser focused on every aspect of the City’s work to addresses housing needs. Developing accountability, transparency and streamlining processes for housing will be among the directives.

Other direct reports to Mayor-elect Harrell include City of Seattle leaders past and present. Former City Councilmember and interim Mayor Tim Burgess will serve as director of strategic initiatives, working on and overseeing projects designated by Mayor-elect Harrell as key priorities. The current City Council Central Staff Deputy Director Dan Eder will serve as director of policy, ensuring the Mayor’s Office is a driving force behind innovative policy development for the City.

SDOT Transportation Operations Division Director Adiam Emery will join the Mayor’s Office in a new role of chief equity officer, tasked with delivering on the mayor-elect’s vision to make tangible progress embedding equity across City departments and programs. Mayor-elect Harrell stated, “As we continue to train, educate, and learn about race and social justice, we will enhance our focus on operationalizing an ambitious equity plan in real, measurable terms.”

An expert in private and public sector housing policy, Marco Lowe will serve as chief operations officer, focused on driving efficiencies in Seattle’s public utility agencies, making Seattle government more transparent and accessible, and streamlining housing and infrastructure construction. “One way to fight for an affordable Seattle is to make sure our government operations reflect the need for cities to think outside of the box in terms of operational excellence,” said Mayor-elect Harrell.

In his first move addressing department leadership, Mayor-elect Harrell will appoint current Innovation and Performance Interim Director Julie Dingley to serve as interim director of the City Budget Office. Dingley replaces Ben Noble, who recently announced his departure from the office.

Other key members of Mayor-elect Harrell‘s incoming staff announced today include Pedro Gómez and Gerald Hankerson, who will work closely on the external affairs and equity work directed by the Harrell administration; and Vinh Tang, who will help drive several of Harrell’s technology initiatives centered around accessibility, affordability, equity, and keeping Seattle competitive in the global marketplace.

Mayor-elect Harrell’s transition team, featuring 12 committees and nearly 150 members, continues to help build his administration and early agenda. Additional announcements of incoming administration staff and department heads will continue over the next several weeks before his inauguration on January 4th.

Learn more about Mayor-elect Harrell and his transition structure at seattle.gov/mayor-elect.

 

Senior Deputy Mayor Monisha Harrell

Monisha Harrell is Board Chair for Equal Rights Washington and is a member of the National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund. Harrell has served as a fellow for Lifelong AIDS Alliance, co-chair of the Capitol Hill LGBTQ Public Safety Task Force, an appointee to the City of Seattle’s 2017 search committee for the Director of Police Accountability, and co-chair for the De-Escalate Washington campaign committee (I-940) requiring de-escalation training for all law enforcement officers in Washington state in 2018. The Governor and Attorney General have appointed Harrell to serve on task forces and working groups addressing police accountability, independent investigations involving police use of force, and hate crimes.

Deputy Mayor of Housing and Homelessness Tiffany Washington

Tiffany Washington has worked on some of the City’s most formidable challenges before and during the pandemic. She has served as Division Director of Homelessness within the Seattle Department of Human Services and as Deputy Director at the Department of Education and Early Learning. She has contributed to initiatives that build more opportunities for Seattle’s youth, including Seattle Promise and Seattle Youth Employment. Her passion for racial, educational, and economic justice can be traced back to her early work as a youth outreach worker in Seattle’s Central District. Before coming to city government in 2015, she served as Vice President of Programs at Big Brothers Big Sisters of Puget Sound and Director of Youth Programs at the Mockingbird Society, an advocacy organization serving foster youth across Washington.

Director of Strategic Initiatives Tim Burgess

Tim Burgess served 10 years at Seattle City Hall as a member of the City Council and as the City’s 55th Mayor. Burgess was the lead architect of the Seattle Preschool Program for the City’s three- and four-year old children, led the effort in 2011 to double the size of the City’s Families and Education Levy, and championed the adoption of an excise tax on the sale of firearms and ammunition with the revenues dedicated to gun violence prevention and research. Burgess was a consistent and staunch advocate for criminal justice and police reform, economic growth policies, and tourism promotion in his time at City Hall.

Director of Policy Dan Eder

Dan Eder joins the Harrell administration from his current role as Central Staff Deputy Director for the Seattle City Council. He has helped lead a team of independent policy analysts who work for all nine City Councilmembers. Eder has served in various policy roles with the City Council Central Staff for the last 13 years. Before that, Eder worked for ten years at Sound Transit developing transit infrastructure and improving both regional rail and bus service.

Chief Equity Officer Adiam Emery

Adiam Emery brings over 28 years of experience working in City of Seattle government. As the Director of the Transportation Operations Division at the Seattle Department of Transportation, Emery has served as an SDOT representative on multi-agency teams focused on regional multimodal transportation management. Working with community and transportation stakeholders to prioritize equity throughout SDOT projects, Emery has implemented policies such as leading pedestrian intervals at all signalized intersections, decreasing speed limits in all arterial streets to 25MPH, and establishing the Transportation Equity Framework. Emery is an executive advisor for the Black employee resource group, working to develop equitable practices around recruitment, retention, and employee professional growth within the department.

Chief Operations Officer Marco Lowe

Marco Lowe has a long career in public service working for Governor Gary Locke, Mayor Greg Nickels, serving as departmental Chief of Staff in New York City’s Bloomberg administration, and as a department director for Mayor Mike McGinn. In his most recent role, he was an advocate for all housing as the Government Affairs Director for the Master Builders of King and Snohomish Counties. Lowe is an adjunct professor at Seattle University. In 2020, he wrote the book “Powershift” discussing the importance of the transition period for elected officials that falls between the campaign and taking office.

Interim Director of City Budget Office Julie Dingley

Julie Dingley is currently the Interim Director of Seattle’s Innovation and Performance Team. Before this role, Dingley served as a Fiscal and Policy Manager in the City Budget Office, covering issues including citywide homelessness response, affordable housing, labor standards, and economic development. Leading the City’s COVID-19 federal funding response, she is the lead for the Seattle Rescue Plan, allocating Seattle’s share of the newest federal COVID relief funds from the American Rescue Plan. She previously served at the White House Office of Management and Budget with oversight responsibility for nearly $25 billion in resources, including the Department of Justice’s state, local and tribal grants.

Director of External Affairs Pedro Gómez

Pedro Gómez is the director of Small Business Development for the City of Seattle’s Office of Economic Development. He has created and implemented programs to stabilize and grow small businesses and maintained partnerships with community-based organizations. Gómez previously served in the Mayor’s Office as an External Affairs Liaison where he advised and helped implement the City’s strategic community outreach plan and worked to redesign the City’s boards and commissions program to ensure equitable representation. He is a small business owner and served as a board member with Seattle YMCA and One America.

External Affairs Liaison Gerald Hankerson

Gerald Hankerson is the former President of Seattle/King County NAACP and the current regional President of NAACP State Area Conference, Alaska, Oregon and Washington.  He previously served on the City of Seattle’s Race & Social Justice Roundtable (RSJI). The Governor appointed Hankerson to serve on the State’s Advisory Board for Office of Public Defense in Washington state. Hankerson travels the state and nation discussing the criminal justice system at colleges, universities, and political forums, addressing the impacts of social injustice on community.

 

Technology and Performance Advisor Vinh Tang

Vinh Tang currently serves as a Governance Advisor for the Seattle Information Technology Department. Tang brings a deep understanding of the City’s operations with 14 years of experience at the City and an enthusiasm for technology, problem-solving, and innovation.

 

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2 Comments
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All Power to the People
All Power to the People
2 years ago

“No nepotism, just friends and family.”

CKathes
CKathes
2 years ago

She seems well qualified, and likely more progressive than he is. This doesn’t look like a Javanka type situation, at least not yet.